It sounds kind of Slavic to me, although all the common Latinate words are distracting. I seem to hear “University of Sofia” too, plus I’ve heard that Bulgarian is one of the Slavic languages least grammatically complicated (don’t ask me how I think it sounds like that, though), so I’ll go with Bulgarian, too.

Of course all that talk about the University of Sofia and Balkan studies will prompt everyone to listen to a Bulgarian radio station and compare, but I’m not really good at telling apart Slavic languages :) The Bulgarian station I listened to sounded pretty similar to this one.

My first reaction was that we’d just hopped the Danube to Bulgaria, but after a couple more listens, I think this is actually Albanian. Reasons: a lot of words with -ës, which I believe is one form of the genitive ending; the [w]-like sound in what I would first think is ‘balkanistikës’, which may actually be spelled with a double ‘ll’, which is pronounced [w]. So… I googled up ‘ballkanistikës’ and the first result was from Radio Bulgaria in Shqip (Albanian). In fact, most of the results seem to talk about the “Balkanistics” (Balkan studies) programme at the University of Sofia.

Although Bulgarian is the least intelligible Slavic language for me (native is Czech), I would expect to understand at least something if it was Bulgarian. To me, it sounds like a Baltic language, and my favourite guess which I use always when I have no idea is Latvian. So I say Latvian. (Still wonder why they speak about University of Sophia, though.)

Well, I take it back, Albanian is far more probable, even if it was already twice in the Omniglot quiz. The final -s, which lead my suspection of Balticity, aren’t as frequent as they seemed on the first listening.

Some words can be identified. Lots of “për” and “të”, “dhjëtori” (December) at the begining, “ushtere” in the middle (no idea what it means, but Google found it in Albanian texts, perhaps something related to “ushtria” = army?), and shapes of international words like “universiteti” also point in that direction. Almost certainly Albanian.

The ë and r do sound very Albanian…I switch my guess! I actually did have some Albanian classmates back in college; their English accent never seemed to be too pronounced compared to most other international students I knew.